A Tale of Two HTPC's
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A Tale of Two HTPC's
I've actually got two HTPC's to show here, although the tale of their coming together is heavily intertwined. I've had an HTPC for years, housed in an old Antec Ovation II. It was decent, not particularly powerful or all that quiet, but it served its purpose well, mostly playing standard def Xvid .avi files. At some point I upgraded it to an Intel C2D E6600 with a Scythe mini-Ninja cooler (80mm Scythe fan) and an Asus 8600GT w/ passive cooling to quiet it somewhat and allow it to handle at least 720p x264 .mkv's. My main living room display is limited to 720p anyway, so it was sufficient although nothing great.
I decided to build another HTPC when we upgraded the TV in our bedroom to a 1080p Plasma. Benefiting from all the awesome research and advice here (as demonstrated by this thread) and at other sites, I put together this:
Antec NSK 2400 w/o PSU
Scythe S-FLEX 120mm Case Fan, 800RPM, Noise: 8.7dBA, Model: SFF21D
Scythe Mini Ninja
Enermax Modu 82+ 425W
Intel Pentium E5200 Wolfdale 2.5GHz LGA 775 65W
Gigabyte GA-E7AUM-DS2H microATX motherboard
CORSAIR 4GB (2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400)
OCZ Vertex Series OCZSSD2-1VTX30G 2.5" 30GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid state disk (SSD)
Trendnet 802.11n PCI adapter
Adesso 2.4GHz RF Wireless Mini USB Keyboard
Scythe Kaze 40mm Fan for NB cooling
It's a great system, able to handle all the files I've thrown at it, and is almost dead silent. The PSU is crazy quiet, and the Scythe 120 fan is also really good. After reseating the NB cooler with better thermal paste, and adding the 40mm Scythe fan, I've got no overheating issues there at all, and it's also essentially noiseless. I mounted the mini-Ninja with a Thermalright 775 mounting kit, something I would recommend to anybody, as I truly detest the 775 push pin mounting.
Unfortunately, the Antec 2400, as much as I like it, just did not really fit size-wise where we wanted it in the bedroom. I ended up having to put it behind the TV, on the case's side, which of course is not what it's designed to do. So, long story short, I moved that HTPC down to the living room, and decided to rebuild my old HTPC to fit better in the bedroom. I should say, the new build kind of a kludge, and not necessarily something I would recommend to anybody else, but I thought you all would enjoy it nonetheless.
Lian-Li PC-Q7
No case fan
Cogage MST-140 1366/775 CPU Cooler by Thermalright
Zotac GF9300-D-E mini-ITX motherboard
Intel C2D E6600
2x1GB OCZ RAM
Western Digital Scorpio Blue 160GB notebook drive
Zalman Fanmate 2
150 Watt Pico PSU
Belkin USB 802.11n adapter
Gyration Air Music Remote/Keyboard
As you can see, it does fit quite nicely behind the TV, so in that sense the Lian-Li case is precisely what I wanted. OTOH, it's not a very good case, imo, and is poorly designed overall (although it looks nice). Knowing I would likely use a PicoPSU, I didn't have to worry about fitting a large PSU in above the motherboard, and could pretty much use whatever CPU heatsink I wanted, even a big tower. But since there would be no case fan, I wanted something that was down blowing, and that would help with any NB heat issues on the Zotac board. I would have happily gotten a Scythe Zipang, but my hatred of the 775 push pin mounting drove me to Thermalright. I was really intrigued, however, by the less expensive Cogage branded Thermalrights, however, so I thought I would try out the down blowing MST-140, knowing that even if it wasn't quite the performer the Thermalright AXP-140 might be, I could undervolt the 140mm fan sufficiently to achieve good cooling and near silence. And generally that has been the case, although I ended up just using a Zalman Fanmate to dial down the fan instead of Speedfan as I usually would do. Also, the heatsink did not fit into the case well, hitting the optical drive cage, but since I wasn't going to need an optical drive, I just ripped the cage out.
Another important point about the Zotac MB is that the included WiFi adapter is nice and space-saving, but since it's only 802.11g rated, it just couldn't handle high def files (at least on my n-based home network). I disabled it, connected an USB 802.11n adapter and am having no stuttering issues with even 1080p files.
Couple of other points: the Adesso wireless keyboard is pretty bad. I wouldn't recommend it. Gyration is much better, in my experience. I'm using Windows 7 with both of the builds, and have been very happy with it. I've had a number of issues with getting Ubuntu (9.04 Jaunty Jackalope) working correctly with VDPAU graphics acceleration sadly (although I really love both XBMC and Boxee) so I'll probably try again with the next major release. On the living room HTPC I also have a Hauppauge HD-PVR connected, and right now running that in Linux is a bit of hassle as well, imo. In Windows 7 I just use Media Player Classic-Home Theater to take advantage of GPU acceleration on media playback, and it's great, no problems at all. The Grytion mouse/remote and keyboard have a lot of built in functionality that I can't use yet in Windows 7, hopefully they will release some updated software soon.
Thanks for taking a look!
I decided to build another HTPC when we upgraded the TV in our bedroom to a 1080p Plasma. Benefiting from all the awesome research and advice here (as demonstrated by this thread) and at other sites, I put together this:
Antec NSK 2400 w/o PSU
Scythe S-FLEX 120mm Case Fan, 800RPM, Noise: 8.7dBA, Model: SFF21D
Scythe Mini Ninja
Enermax Modu 82+ 425W
Intel Pentium E5200 Wolfdale 2.5GHz LGA 775 65W
Gigabyte GA-E7AUM-DS2H microATX motherboard
CORSAIR 4GB (2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400)
OCZ Vertex Series OCZSSD2-1VTX30G 2.5" 30GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid state disk (SSD)
Trendnet 802.11n PCI adapter
Adesso 2.4GHz RF Wireless Mini USB Keyboard
Scythe Kaze 40mm Fan for NB cooling
It's a great system, able to handle all the files I've thrown at it, and is almost dead silent. The PSU is crazy quiet, and the Scythe 120 fan is also really good. After reseating the NB cooler with better thermal paste, and adding the 40mm Scythe fan, I've got no overheating issues there at all, and it's also essentially noiseless. I mounted the mini-Ninja with a Thermalright 775 mounting kit, something I would recommend to anybody, as I truly detest the 775 push pin mounting.
Unfortunately, the Antec 2400, as much as I like it, just did not really fit size-wise where we wanted it in the bedroom. I ended up having to put it behind the TV, on the case's side, which of course is not what it's designed to do. So, long story short, I moved that HTPC down to the living room, and decided to rebuild my old HTPC to fit better in the bedroom. I should say, the new build kind of a kludge, and not necessarily something I would recommend to anybody else, but I thought you all would enjoy it nonetheless.
Lian-Li PC-Q7
No case fan
Cogage MST-140 1366/775 CPU Cooler by Thermalright
Zotac GF9300-D-E mini-ITX motherboard
Intel C2D E6600
2x1GB OCZ RAM
Western Digital Scorpio Blue 160GB notebook drive
Zalman Fanmate 2
150 Watt Pico PSU
Belkin USB 802.11n adapter
Gyration Air Music Remote/Keyboard
As you can see, it does fit quite nicely behind the TV, so in that sense the Lian-Li case is precisely what I wanted. OTOH, it's not a very good case, imo, and is poorly designed overall (although it looks nice). Knowing I would likely use a PicoPSU, I didn't have to worry about fitting a large PSU in above the motherboard, and could pretty much use whatever CPU heatsink I wanted, even a big tower. But since there would be no case fan, I wanted something that was down blowing, and that would help with any NB heat issues on the Zotac board. I would have happily gotten a Scythe Zipang, but my hatred of the 775 push pin mounting drove me to Thermalright. I was really intrigued, however, by the less expensive Cogage branded Thermalrights, however, so I thought I would try out the down blowing MST-140, knowing that even if it wasn't quite the performer the Thermalright AXP-140 might be, I could undervolt the 140mm fan sufficiently to achieve good cooling and near silence. And generally that has been the case, although I ended up just using a Zalman Fanmate to dial down the fan instead of Speedfan as I usually would do. Also, the heatsink did not fit into the case well, hitting the optical drive cage, but since I wasn't going to need an optical drive, I just ripped the cage out.
Another important point about the Zotac MB is that the included WiFi adapter is nice and space-saving, but since it's only 802.11g rated, it just couldn't handle high def files (at least on my n-based home network). I disabled it, connected an USB 802.11n adapter and am having no stuttering issues with even 1080p files.
Couple of other points: the Adesso wireless keyboard is pretty bad. I wouldn't recommend it. Gyration is much better, in my experience. I'm using Windows 7 with both of the builds, and have been very happy with it. I've had a number of issues with getting Ubuntu (9.04 Jaunty Jackalope) working correctly with VDPAU graphics acceleration sadly (although I really love both XBMC and Boxee) so I'll probably try again with the next major release. On the living room HTPC I also have a Hauppauge HD-PVR connected, and right now running that in Linux is a bit of hassle as well, imo. In Windows 7 I just use Media Player Classic-Home Theater to take advantage of GPU acceleration on media playback, and it's great, no problems at all. The Grytion mouse/remote and keyboard have a lot of built in functionality that I can't use yet in Windows 7, hopefully they will release some updated software soon.
Thanks for taking a look!
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Very nice builds! I'm envious of your Vertex, but couldn't bring myself to pay the premium just yet. How are your temps for the GF9400 in speedfan? I'm curious because I was on the fence between the mini-kaze vs the thermalright tower cooler, but ended up ducting instead.
Also, are you running your S-FLEX @ 800rpm or undervolted? Since you have a fan on your NB, you should be able to get away with a lot lower revs on the case fan unless your ambient temps are high.
Also, are you running your S-FLEX @ 800rpm or undervolted? Since you have a fan on your NB, you should be able to get away with a lot lower revs on the case fan unless your ambient temps are high.
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The temps on the GF9400 are fine, I actually don't really monitor it any more, since Speedfan never flags it as an issue.
I'm running the S-Flex a little undervolted, but not much. It is a really, really quiet fan, imo. It's always a good sign when you have really put your ear next to a fan to determine if its truly on or not.
I'm running the S-Flex a little undervolted, but not much. It is a really, really quiet fan, imo. It's always a good sign when you have really put your ear next to a fan to determine if its truly on or not.
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What kinds of temps are considered "fine" is pretty subjective, so i hope you'll excuse the prying. For reference, my typical long-session usage temps are at 58±2°C in speedfan and a so-far unrealistic full CPU+GPU load is ~71°C. Ambient is typically 16-20°C. How much of an improvement does the mini-kaze give you?
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Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
I know this is a really old thread, but can you elaborate on what you did with the mounting kit?kosmonautbruce wrote:
I mounted the mini-Ninja with a Thermalright 775 mounting kit, something I would recommend to anybody, as I truly detest the 775 push pin mounting.
I can't picture how you could adapt the existing heatsink to connect with Thermalright mounting hardware.
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
Thermalright sold a Bolt-thru Kit for the LGA775 socket as well ans a few others. It allowed you to replace the push pins on many coolers with bolts and compression springs that attached to a backplate. I used it for a Scythe Ninja on a previous build.
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
Thank you so much.
I had no idea that this was even an option. I have an old Ninja Mini rev. B that I'm installing on a ASUS Z87M-PLUS LGA 1150 motherboard in my old Antec NSK2480 HTPC case. The push-pins on the Ninja Mini bracket work, but they don't feel particularly sturdy or reliable. A bolt-through solution definitely makes me feel more comfortable.
Incidentally, I know this CPU cooler is old, but I haven't seen a lot of coolers that I'm sure would fit in this case. I think the Noctua NH-L12 would probably work, but I'm not sure it would clear my RAM modules. I'd have to probably buy new "low profile HTPC ram" like G.SKILL Ares.
I couldn't find any 115x Thermalright kits for sale anywhere, but I just found and purchased this kit from Evercool which should work the same and it's certainly cheap enough...
EVERCOOL EC-LGA115X-ES Universal Screw Mounting for Socket 115X Cooler w/back Plate
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835119206
I had no idea that this was even an option. I have an old Ninja Mini rev. B that I'm installing on a ASUS Z87M-PLUS LGA 1150 motherboard in my old Antec NSK2480 HTPC case. The push-pins on the Ninja Mini bracket work, but they don't feel particularly sturdy or reliable. A bolt-through solution definitely makes me feel more comfortable.
Incidentally, I know this CPU cooler is old, but I haven't seen a lot of coolers that I'm sure would fit in this case. I think the Noctua NH-L12 would probably work, but I'm not sure it would clear my RAM modules. I'd have to probably buy new "low profile HTPC ram" like G.SKILL Ares.
I couldn't find any 115x Thermalright kits for sale anywhere, but I just found and purchased this kit from Evercool which should work the same and it's certainly cheap enough...
EVERCOOL EC-LGA115X-ES Universal Screw Mounting for Socket 115X Cooler w/back Plate
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835119206
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
As a solution for the ninja mini was found, i would dare to ask about something older!
I have a si-97a as an "art piece" near me - http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835109124
Can something be bought to make this fit on 115x?
I have a si-97a as an "art piece" near me - http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835109124
Can something be bought to make this fit on 115x?
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
Dear moderators,
I apologize for hijacking this thread. Feel free to split these posts off into a new thread if you so choose.
Thermalright makes a "universal" mount that might work and could be cheap enough to give it a try...
TRUE BTK - http://www.thermalright.com/html/produc ... e_btk.html
$15.95 at Amazon.com
It says that it's compatible with the SI-128, which looks similar.
They also have an older version that has a more obvious way to tighten it with a center a screw and a wrench but I can't find anyone selling it...
VX BTK II - http://www.thermalright.com/html/produc ... btk_2.html
Again, all of this is extremely experimental. You could damage your hardware. Proceed at your own risk.
I apologize for hijacking this thread. Feel free to split these posts off into a new thread if you so choose.
Not only is that ancient, but you're trying to go cross-species. So you're in serious experimental territory.Tzeb wrote: I have a si-97a as an "art piece" near me - http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835109124
Can something be bought to make this fit on 115x?
Thermalright makes a "universal" mount that might work and could be cheap enough to give it a try...
TRUE BTK - http://www.thermalright.com/html/produc ... e_btk.html
$15.95 at Amazon.com
It says that it's compatible with the SI-128, which looks similar.
They also have an older version that has a more obvious way to tighten it with a center a screw and a wrench but I can't find anyone selling it...
VX BTK II - http://www.thermalright.com/html/produc ... btk_2.html
Again, all of this is extremely experimental. You could damage your hardware. Proceed at your own risk.
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
si-128 has a hole in the middle, while the si-97a looks like this - http://koodinvuoksi.net/images/thumbnai ... si-97a.jpg
A narrow clip holds it down - http://insanetek.com/reviews/cooling/Th ... %20035.jpg
Must investigate further!
A narrow clip holds it down - http://insanetek.com/reviews/cooling/Th ... %20035.jpg
Must investigate further!
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
Yeah, I saw that it was different but since the TRUE BTK is supposedly adjustable for different pressure, I thought that maybe it could be modified to work.Tzeb wrote:si-128 has a hole in the middle, while the si-97a looks like this - http://koodinvuoksi.net/images/thumbnai ... si-97a.jpg
A narrow clip holds it down - http://insanetek.com/reviews/cooling/Th ... %20035.jpg
You might need to break out the Dremel and grind off the "fins" that stick up to make it work.
Though, at some point, you gotta ask "what is your time worth?". I'd probably just buy a new cooler or a newer USED cooler off of Ebay that was designed for Intel boards.
Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
Exactly. A mounting kit without any work might be worth it, just for fun, but wasting time on modding...krick wrote:"what is your time worth?"
For fun, check this out. Some have done mods with it, in 2005!
http://archive.techarp.com/showarticle9 ... 246&pgno=0
http://archive.techarp.com/showarticle6 ... 246&pgno=6
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Re: A Tale of Two HTPC's
It's fun to see this old thread renewed, as it makes me think back to those builds (no longer in service).
These days I am using an Akasa Euler Thin-ITX based HTPC as my main media player. No moving parts, no sound whatsoever.
The other HTPC has been replaced by a Google Chromecast using Plex. Silent obviously, but limited in functionality relative to an HTPC. But in the bedroom, it's sufficient.
These days I am using an Akasa Euler Thin-ITX based HTPC as my main media player. No moving parts, no sound whatsoever.
The other HTPC has been replaced by a Google Chromecast using Plex. Silent obviously, but limited in functionality relative to an HTPC. But in the bedroom, it's sufficient.